Does dexrazoxane safely prevent anthracycline-related cardiotoxicity in children and adolescents?
Dexrazoxane is an effective and safe cardioprotectant in children receiving high-dose anthracyclines, leading to the removal of its prior contraindication by the EMA.
Dexrazoxane can prevent anthracycline-associated cardiotoxicity. However, in 2011, its use in children was contraindicated by the EMA over concerns of increased risk of infection, myelosuppression and second primary malignancies, and because its efficacy in children had not then been established. We review here the evidence published since 2011, which confirms that dexrazoxane is an effective cardioprotectant in children and adolescents, is not associated with an increased risk of second primary malignancies or excess early or late mortality and does not impair chemotherapy efficacy. Based on this evidence, the contraindication for children and adolescents requiring high doses of anthracyclines and at risk for cardiotoxicity was removed from the European labeling for dexrazoxane.
Reichardt et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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